Tuff Hailstones by Clive Boulter

The Lake District’s tuff hailstones – accretionary lapilli AKA birds eye tuff, also known as pheasant‘s eye tuff, by Clive Boulter

Clive Boulter explained using animations and video clips that the bird’s eye tuff of the BVG may not necessarily have been formed in thunderstorms created by volcanic explosions. A classification proposes three types; pellets, coated pellets and accretionary lapilli. An elongated distortion of the pellets in the well-known ‘bird’s eye tuff’ in Kentmere has enabled a calculation of 50-60% shortening of the Earth’s crust in the ‘slate belt, where cleaved’, as plates converged in the period of Ordovician volcanic activity in the Lake District.

A 1820s painting based on Pliny’s account of the Vesuvius eruption of AD 79 was used in an animation to show how lapilli tuff forms in explosive volcanoes with lots of water; a Phreatoplinian type of eruption. Magma is shredded into ash in a strong thrust of gas from the volcanic vent. This rises in a column, eventually spreading and the particles drop, some as ash pellets. Accretionary lapilli may also form when part of the pyroclastic flow moving down the side of an explosive volcano lifts up into a ‘Phoenix cloud’. Ash pellets become coated as they sink into the flow, stick together and are lithified.

BVG vulcanicity began with the eruption of andesite lavas from fissures, which opened due to crustal extension, despite overall plate convergence, to build up as a plateau. Tens of cubic kilometres of water entered the magma chamber to create a Phreatoplinian eruption, with repeated pyroclastic eruptions and caldera collapse. The Scafell caldera was 20 x 20 km in size. Later a lava dome, caldera lake and tuff ring finished the vulcanicity. The volcanoes of BVG of the Lake District are interpreted now as low plateaux, rather than the steep-sided composite volcanoes which featured in earlier reconstructions.

Thanks to Sylvia Woodhead for this write-up of the 20th January event.

Members’ Evening Reschedule

The CGS Members’ Evening which was cancelled due to floods, will now be combined with the AGM on Wednesday 2nd March 2016.

The venue for the meeting will be BRAITHWAITE INSTITUTE, CA12 5TD on the A66 at Braithwate near Keswick because the venue originally booked is still being repaired from flood damage.

The previously scheduled talk by Dr. Pottas on the Yorkshire Potash Mine will now take place on 21st September 2016.

Can you help identification?

If you can help with the following, please get in touch:

I’m an archaeologist working on a project in Upper Eskdale, and would welcome some advice on a BVG boulder located as part of a prehistoric cairn. It has markings on its surface that appear to be anthropogenic, but I’d like to know whether they could have been formed as part of volcanic formation processes.

Steve

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